To determine the shortest wall the bricklayer can build using the 4-inch, 12-inch, and 10-inch bricks, we need to find the least common multiple (LCM) of the brick lengths. The LCM of 4, 12, and 10 is 60 inches. Therefore, each wall will be 60 inches long, allowing the bricklayer to use a combination of the different brick lengths efficiently.
81 bricks.12 feet times 12 inches per foot = 144 inches.144 inches divided by 16 inches per brick = 9 bricks in length/width.9 bricks (length) times 9 bricks (width) = 81 bricks.
multiply your total linear feet by 12 inches (1 foot), divide that number by the length of the brick and there is your answer.
The circumference of a circle with a 24 foot radius is 2*pi*24 = 150.8 ft (approx) The length of each brick is 12 inches = 1 foot. So 151 bricks are needed.
About 14 bricks should do it.
A standard jumbo brick typically measures about 3.5 inches by 7.5 inches. To calculate the number of jumbo bricks in a square foot (12 inches by 12 inches), you can first find the area of one jumbo brick, which is approximately 0.18 square feet. Dividing the area of one square foot by the area of a jumbo brick reveals that there are about 5 to 6 jumbo bricks in a square foot, depending on the exact dimensions of the bricks.
81 bricks.12 feet times 12 inches per foot = 144 inches.144 inches divided by 16 inches per brick = 9 bricks in length/width.9 bricks (length) times 9 bricks (width) = 81 bricks.
A brick mason, a stone mason or a builder.
That would depend on the length of bricks that are used. Since the average brick is about seven inches long, I'll use that length to calculate how many bricks you will need. First, multiply the length of your garden by 12 to get the length in inches: 37 x 12 = 444 inches. Then divide the 444 by 7 (the length of the bricks) which will give you 63.43. So the number of bricks you will need (if they are 7 in long) will be 64. If the bricks are a different length, just use the same formula to calculate how many you will need, or post a message to me on my message board, and I will calculate it for you.
multiply your total linear feet by 12 inches (1 foot), divide that number by the length of the brick and there is your answer.
The circumference of a circle with a 24 foot radius is 2*pi*24 = 150.8 ft (approx) The length of each brick is 12 inches = 1 foot. So 151 bricks are needed.
A bricklayer is someone that builds walls houses shops etc. when building there object they organise the equipment they will have to use and make sure that they have got enough malter, bricks etc.
Each brick is 27 square inches. 27*434=11,718 square inches of bricks.
The average 9inch brick will take a good bricklayer some 10 seconds to lay and square.
About 14 bricks should do it.
Of course it depends on the size of the brick. But you can still do it by the following steps. 1. Let y = square inches of one brick (compute length X width). 2. # bricks = 144 / y ( the number of square inches in a sq. foot divided by size of a single brick) For example suppose a brick is 2 by 8, then y = 16. 144/16 = 9 so you'd have 9 bricks in a square foot. If you think about it, lay the 9 bricks side by side they'd cover an area that is 18 x 8 =144, the same number of inches in a 12 in x 12 in area. If you are going to use mortar between the bricks, remember to allow for that in your computation of the brick size..
A standard jumbo brick typically measures about 3.5 inches by 7.5 inches. To calculate the number of jumbo bricks in a square foot (12 inches by 12 inches), you can first find the area of one jumbo brick, which is approximately 0.18 square feet. Dividing the area of one square foot by the area of a jumbo brick reveals that there are about 5 to 6 jumbo bricks in a square foot, depending on the exact dimensions of the bricks.
No bricks are made out of bricks.